Hatch traveled throughout the United States, Central, and South America, and in the Far East. She was co-author, with
Mary Marvin Breckinridge Patterson, of ''Olivia's African Diary: Cape Town to Cairo, 1932'', a record of their trip throughout Africa after college, which was published in 1980. Hatch died in 1983, aged 75 years. Her papers are in the collection of Bryn Mawr College. She was active with the
American Red Cross and American Conferences of
Social Work. In the 1940s, Hatch worked with the
League of Women Voters, City Club (Albany), Race Relations group and the Red Cross Speakers Bureau. In the 1950s she worked with the Norfolk League of Women Voters, and was active in church groups and the
Parent-Teacher Association. In
Lenox, Massachusetts, in the 1960s, she volunteered as a reader for
Recording for the Blind, and helped to entertain young artists in conjunction with the
Berkshire Music Center. She and her husband donated significant lands toward the creation of the Berkshire County Land Trust and Conservation Fund. ==Personal life and legacy==